| IRONMONGER | Dealer in metal utensils and tools, a hardware merchant (10) |
| THEBLUEBOY | Portrait by Thomas Gainsborough, thought to be of Jonathan Buttle, the son of a wealthy hardware merchant |
| SCRAPMERCHANT | Dispose of dealer in metal |
| TINMEN | Dealers in metal goods |
| PAINTMIXER | Shake machine in a hardware store? |
| HAMMERHEAD | Large shark and tool part? (10) |
| NAILSALOON | Bar with a hardware motif? |
| COOKSHOP | A hardware store selling bakeware, crockery, cutlery, pans, pots, utensils and other such kitchenalia (4,4) |
| SILICONE | Synthetic material used to make cooking utensils, and in cosmetic and plastic surgery (8) |
| RAKE | A hay- or grass-gathering tool; a thin horse; a herd of colts; a string of wagons; a train of railway carriages; or, a debauched man of fashion, aka roue (4) |
| SAW | Tool a magician uses in a woman-in-a-crate act |
| TINWARE | Metal utensils the Arabian Lawrence carries in battle |
| IRONAGE | Period of history that saw bronze replaced by another metal in weapons and tools (4,3) |
| PLUGIN | In computing, a hardware or software module that adds a specific feature to a larger system (4-2) |
| HARDWARE | Domestic goods and tools - components of a computer system (8) |
| APPARATUSES | In retirement old man has a rest, occupied by canary and tool sets |
| PARANG | Short straight-edged knife used as a weapon and tool in the Malay archipelago |
| AXE | Tool a firefighter can use to cut a hole in a roof |
| SCULLERY | From "dish, tray, wooden platter", word for a household's department or room mainly concerned with kitchen utensils and washing-up (8) |
| KITCHEN | Where one might see utensils and cold chicken? |